- Business Insider understands the company had been hoping for a new valuation of at least $4 billion.
- Deliveroo was started by Will Shu, a former banking analyst who hated the lack of options available when he had to eat at his desk.
- Uber had previously been in early talks to buy Deliveroo but that did not pan out.
- Here is the story of how Will Shu built Deliveroo.
- Read more stories on Business Insider's home page.
How Deliveroo went from being the idea of a hungry banker to a $2 billion food delivery giant coveted by Amazon
Food delivery startup Deliveroo is one of the UK's hottest and most valuable startups, worth at least $2 billion and probably more after Amazon's $575 million investment .
On face value, anyone could have come up with the concept. An app which brings you food whenever and wherever you want it? It's the kind of thing any irate worker eating a squashed sandwich at their desk could dream up.
Will Shu, the American cofounder and CEO of Deliveroo, knows this. He told the "i" newspaper in 2017 that the idea was "not complicated ... anyone can have it."
But it was Shu and his cofounder Greg Orlowski who turned the desk dream into a reality in 2013, thanks to a ruthless focus on making food delivery as seamless as possible. Today, his simple idea has been rewarded with a $575 million investment from Amazon .
The Deliveroo app offers takeaway food from thousands of restaurants, many of which never offered delivery services before the startup came along. The eventual goal isn't just to make takeaway easier, but to kill off home cooking for most people altogether.
The startup has revolutionised food delivery. It was worth $2 billion prior to the Amazon deal, and is was once in talks to sell to Uber for billions of dollars . The Amazon deal probably puts its valuation north of $2 billion.
The road hasn't been easy, and Shu & Co. have had to contend with thorny issues such as workers' rights for the thousands of freelance drivers who deliver food and don't have access to benefits.
Here is the story of Deliveroo's story of success.
2001: Deliveroo founder Will Shu is a banking analyst in New York for Morgan Stanley, working long hours and eating $25 takeout with colleagues while pulling late shifts.
Deliveroo
2004: Shu moves to Morgan Stanleys offices in Canary Wharf, London, where his takeout budget evaporates. He spends miserable evenings buying food from the local supermarket chain, Tesco. "It just became really depressing," he said, according to Startups.co.uk.
REUTERS/Toby Melville
Late 2006: Shu is working at a hedge fund and his hours are more reasonable. Takeaway marketplaces like Just Eat are taking off, but Shu finds them lacking. "It was not a great customer experience," he said.
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Late 2007: Convinced he could do better, Shu contacts an old schoolfriend of his, developer Greg Orlowski. The pair try to come up with the first iteration of Deliveroo, but the concept just doesnt work. Part of the reason is that this was the very early days of smartphones, and apps had yet to take off.
AP
June 2010: Shu goes back to the US and to school, taking an MBA at Wharton. "It was a way for me to drink for two years and hang out ... But it did give me time to think," he said.
The Wharton School/Facebook
August 2012: Apple is about to release the iPhone 5 and the App Store has been going for four years. Rival smartphones are taking off. Its time to return to the concept of a marketplace that could deliver any food you want, wherever you want.
Reuters/Yves Herman
February 2013: Shu and Orlowski team up again to build Deliveroo from Shus Chelsea flat. They know this will involve a big fleet of couriers to drop off the food, and that they would need to communicate through an app. But they struggle to win support.
Sandip Bhattacharya/Flickr
February 2013: According to Shu, sceptics told him that English people didnt want good food delivered.
Flickr/Saaleha Bamjee
Mid-2013: Will Shu works as Deliveroos first "rider," picking up food from restaurants and delivering it to customers just to see how the experience works. His friends reportedly prank him by ordering food, just to see the former analyst working as a delivery boy.
Deliveroo
Mid-2013: According to a Forbes profile, Shu once delivered a pizza to his former boss, who thought he had fallen on hard times. Shu said it was "fine" and scooted off without an explanation.
Yelp
According to Forbes, Shu would drive his scooter around for six hours a day to better understand delivery logistics .
June 2014: After starting out with just three restaurants, Deliveroo raises its first $2.75 million funding round from Index and Hoxton Ventures. The money is going to be vital for the companys expansion.
Index Ventures
Late 2014: Deliveroo launches in its first UK city outside of London, Brighton.
Vladislav Gajic / Shutterstock
January 2015: Deliveroo raises again and kicks off its international expansion. By April, it has launched in Paris and Berlin. The service does surprisingly well in Paris, a famously foodie city.
Flickr / Alpha
Late 2015: After only two years in operation, Deliveroo is almost a unicorn and worth more than $600 million. It would take more than a year for the startup to reach the coveted $1 billion valuation, though.
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December 2015: The backlash begins. Deliveroo has hundreds of cyclists peddling around dropping off peoples takeaway food except these riders are not directly employed by the company. The startup is drawn into the emerging debate about workers pay and conditions in the gig economy.
Sam Shead/Business Insider UK
A damning Guardian article by Stefan Stern criticised Deliveroo's low wages and job security.
February 2016: Deliveroo cofounder Greg Orlowski quietly leaves the company. He goes on to cofound Peanut with Michelle Kennedy, a meeting app for mums.
Peanut
May 2016: Deliveroo starts talking about an ambitious plan to help restaurants process more takeout orders. It puts shipping containers in car parks and turns them into mini-kitchens dedicated to preparing Deliveroo orders.
James Cook/Business Insider
August 2016: Deliveroo gets closer to unicorn status with a new tranche of $285 million in funding. It is now firmly one of the buzziest and best-capitalised British tech startups around, and well-loved by its users.
Deliveroo
September 2016: The startup rebrands, abandoning its cute, cartoony kangaroo logo in favour of a geometric, abstract design. Some people think the new design looks a little like a rude two-fingered gesture.
Deliveroo
September 2016: Mike Hudack, a former director of product management at Facebook, joins Deliveroo as its new chief technology officer.
Mike Hudack
November 2016: The gig economy problem blows up for Deliveroo. A small new union called IWGB, targeted at gig economy workers, demands new employment status recognition from Deliveroo.
PA Images
Up until now, all of Deliveroo's riders have been independent contractors , meaning they are not entitled to standard benefits. But union members want paid holiday and minimum wage, expensive benefits that could lose Deliveroo lots of cash.
January 2017: Deliveroo hires Thea Rogers, a former political advisor to ex-British Chancellor George Osborne, as political scrutiny of its business model grows.
Deliveroo
January 2017: Law firm Leigh Day, which has a history of success against gig economy firms, announces it might take legal action against Deliveroo over driver rights.
REUTERS/Charles Platiau
The employment status of these riders continues to be an issue .Deliveroo classes them as "self-employed," but Leigh Day suggests that restrictions placed on them by Deliveroo could mean they should be entitled to further rights like a minimum wage and holiday pay.
April 2017: Deliveroo unveils Deliveroo Editions, pop-up kitchens for established restaurants that help them deal with takeaway requests.
Business Insider/James Cook
The company said at the time each "Editions" location which mostly comprises car parks and other unglamorous areas would include six or seven portable kitchens.
July 2017: Deliveroo moves into a shiny new London headquarters, with an on-site gym, roof top and "centre court" meeting space.
Deliveroo
July 2017: Sky News reports rumours that Japanese giant SoftBank is interested in investing in Deliveroo. A deal never materialises, possibly because the conglomerate went on to invest in a rival, Uber.
Koki Nagahama/Getty Images
September 2017: Deliveroo board member Martin Mignot causes a ruckus when he describes the startups ultimate goal: to kill off home cooking. The firm ultimately wants to make takeaway an easier, cheaper option than prepping food at home.
Index Ventures
You can read about Deliveroo's 2016 financials here , and the Martin Mignot's analysis of Deliveroo's future here .
September 2017: Deliveroos valuation is pegged at $2 billion after it raises $385 million from investors including US fund giants Fidelity and T Rowe Price. This cements Deliveroos status as one of the most valuable startups in the UK.
AP / Leo Correa
October 2017: Deliveroo begins to draw unfavourable comparisons with Uber, thanks to its tendency to bend the rules. The Guardian reports that the startup didnt ask council permission to create its pop-up kitchens, and that local neighbours are complaining about the noise.
Deliveroo
October 2017: Deliveroo warns that if it is forced to recognise its riders as employees, it might not be able to grow.
UK Parliament
Deliveroo's UK MD Dan Warne told politicians that it needs to be able to attract riders who work on a flexible basis, otherwise costs would go up.
November 2017: Will Shu tells Business Insider that going public would be "somewhat logical" for Deliveroo. At some point, his investors are going to want to see a return on their money.
Reuters/herval
November 2017: Deliveroo wins a victory in its legal fight against the union IWGB. A tribunal rules that the startup doesnt need to regard its drivers as workers. Shu tells Business Insider there is lots of misunderstanding about workers rights among politicians and journalists.
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March 2018: Deliveroo lays out a radical plan to cut its margins, in a presentation obtained by the Eater blog. According to the report, the company eventually wants to provide its own food to cut costs.
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May-August 2018: Deliveroo focuses on the welfare of its riders, providing accident cover, first aid training, and medical insurance globally.
Deliveroo
May 2018: Deliveroo announces that it will plough 5 million ($6.5 million) into finding celebrity chefs to partner with to create new experimental concepts.
Ivana Lalicki/Shutterstock
June 2018: Deliveroo, now operating in 12 countries around the world, says it will up its UK expansion to take on Shus original bete noire Just Eat. The plan is to add 5,000 more restaurants to the Deliveroo app, and let outlets use their own delivery drivers.
Deliveroo
September 2018: Despite the rapid expansion, Deliveroo still hasnt launched in the US at this point.
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September 2018: After months of chatter, media reports suggest Uber is in early talks to buy Deliveroo. The price tag would need to be above Deliveroos previous valuation of $2 billion, and would merge two major players in food delivery.
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May 2019: The talks with Uber came to nothing. But Amazon invests $575 million, a warchest large enough to hold off the need for an IPO and fund a long-awaited move into the US. The deal makes Deliveroo Britains largest unicorn tech startup, with a valuation north of $4 billion.
JASON REDMOND/AFP/Getty Images
Deliveroo now works with over 80,000 restaurants. It has 60,000 riders and 2,500 employees around the world, the company says. It operates in over 500 cities in 14 countries: Australia, Belgium, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Ireland, Netherlands, Singapore, Spain, Taiwan, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and the UK.
Reuters
This story was originally published on September 28, 2018, and has been updated since then.
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